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21 pages, 4392 KiB  
Article
Visualization of Kinetic Parameters of a Droplet Nucleation Boiling on Smooth and Micro-Pillar Surfaces with Inclined Angles
by Yi-Nan Zhang, Guo-Qing Huang, Lu-Ming Zhao and Hong-Xia Chen
Energies 2025, 18(15), 4152; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18154152 - 5 Aug 2025
Abstract
The evaporation dynamics of droplets on smooth and inclined micro-pillar surfaces were experimentally investigated. The surface temperature was increased from 50 °C to 120 °C, with the inclination angles being 0°, 30°, 45°, and 60° respectively. The dynamic parameters, including contact area, nucleation [...] Read more.
The evaporation dynamics of droplets on smooth and inclined micro-pillar surfaces were experimentally investigated. The surface temperature was increased from 50 °C to 120 °C, with the inclination angles being 0°, 30°, 45°, and 60° respectively. The dynamic parameters, including contact area, nucleation density, bubble stable diameter, and droplet asymmetry, were recorded using two high-speed video cameras, and the corresponding evaporation performance was analyzed. Experimental results showed that the inclination angle had a significant influence on the evaporation of micro-pillar surfaces than smooth surfaces as well as a positive correlation between the enhancement performance of the micro-pillars and increasing inclination angles. This angular dependence arises from surface inclination-induced tail elongation and the corresponding asymmetry of droplets. With definition of the one-dimensional asymmetry factor (ε) and volume asymmetry factor (γ), it was proven that although the asymmetric thickness of the droplets reduces the nucleation density and bubble stable diameter, the droplet asymmetry significantly increased the heat exchange area, resulting in a 37% improvement in the evaporation rate of micro-pillar surfaces and about a 15% increase in its enhancement performance to smooth surfaces when the inclination angle increased from 0°to 60°. These results indicate that asymmetry causes changes in heat transfer conditions, specifically, a significant increase in the wetted area and deformation of the liquid film, which are the direct enhancement mechanisms of inclined micro-pillar surfaces. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advancements in Heat Transfer and Fluid Flow for Energy Applications)
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13 pages, 2224 KiB  
Article
Digital Eye Strain Monitoring for One-Hour Smartphone Engagement Through Eye Activity Measurement System
by Bhanu Priya Dandumahanti, Prithvi Krishna Chittoor and Murali Subramaniyam
J. Eye Mov. Res. 2025, 18(4), 34; https://doi.org/10.3390/jemr18040034 - 5 Aug 2025
Viewed by 2
Abstract
Smartphones have revolutionized our daily lives, becoming portable pocket computers with easy internet access. India, the second-highest smartphone and internet user, experienced a significant rise in smartphone usage between 2013 and 2024. Prolonged smartphone use, exceeding 20 min at a time, can lead [...] Read more.
Smartphones have revolutionized our daily lives, becoming portable pocket computers with easy internet access. India, the second-highest smartphone and internet user, experienced a significant rise in smartphone usage between 2013 and 2024. Prolonged smartphone use, exceeding 20 min at a time, can lead to physical and mental health issues, including psychophysiological disorders. Digital devices and their extended exposure to blue light cause digital eyestrain, sleep disorders and visual-related problems. This research examines the impact of 1 h smartphone usage on visual fatigue among young Indian adults. A portable, low-cost system has been developed to measure visual activity to address this. The developed visual activity measurement system measures blink rate, inter-blink interval, and pupil diameter. Measured eye activity was recorded during 1 h smartphone usage of e-book reading, video watching, and social-media reels (short videos). Social media reels show increased screen variations, affecting pupil dilation and reducing blink rate due to continuous screen brightness and intensity changes. This reduction in blink rate and increase in inter-blink interval or pupil dilation could lead to visual fatigue. Full article
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13 pages, 1780 KiB  
Article
The Use of Sound Recorders to Remotely Measure Grass Intake Behaviour in Horses
by Daisy E. F. Taylor, Bryony E. Lancaster and Andrea D. Ellis
Animals 2025, 15(15), 2273; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15152273 - 4 Aug 2025
Viewed by 351
Abstract
Visual observation to record grass intake is time-consuming and labour-intensive. Technological methods, such as activity monitors, have been used but only record head position. This study aimed to evaluate sound recorders attached to headcollars to acoustically measure grass intake behaviour in horses as [...] Read more.
Visual observation to record grass intake is time-consuming and labour-intensive. Technological methods, such as activity monitors, have been used but only record head position. This study aimed to evaluate sound recorders attached to headcollars to acoustically measure grass intake behaviour in horses as a low-cost alternative method. Pilot Study 1 assessed 6 × 11 min periods comparing bites/min and chews/min between video footage (VD) and sound recorders (SR). Grazing was identified audibly (SRear) and visually through soundwave pattern software (SRwav). Chew rates (SRear: 47 ± 5 chews/min, VD: 43 ± 4 chews/min) were similar between methods. Pilot Study 2 compared hourly grass intake times between SRwav and visual observation (VO) for two horses during a 3 h period. Results showed significant correlation between methods (rho = 0.99, p < 0.01, Spearman). The main study measured intake behaviour using SRwav and VO methods for three free-ranging horses during 3 h observation periods over multiple days, adding up to 3 × 24 h in winter and in spring (n = 48). Mean differences per period between SRwav and VO were 1.8% ± 3 s.d. Foraging duration per period measured with SRwav closely matched VO (r2 = 0.99, p < 0.001). Sound recorders accurately recorded grass intake time and chews in grazing horses during moderate weather conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Equids)
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24 pages, 1751 KiB  
Article
Robust JND-Guided Video Watermarking via Adaptive Block Selection and Temporal Redundancy
by Antonio Cedillo-Hernandez, Lydia Velazquez-Garcia, Manuel Cedillo-Hernandez, Ismael Dominguez-Jimenez and David Conchouso-Gonzalez
Mathematics 2025, 13(15), 2493; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13152493 - 3 Aug 2025
Viewed by 225
Abstract
This paper introduces a robust and imperceptible video watermarking framework designed for blind extraction in dynamic video environments. The proposed method operates in the spatial domain and combines multiscale perceptual analysis, adaptive Just Noticeable Difference (JND)-based quantization, and temporal redundancy via multiframe embedding. [...] Read more.
This paper introduces a robust and imperceptible video watermarking framework designed for blind extraction in dynamic video environments. The proposed method operates in the spatial domain and combines multiscale perceptual analysis, adaptive Just Noticeable Difference (JND)-based quantization, and temporal redundancy via multiframe embedding. Watermark bits are embedded selectively in blocks with high perceptual masking using a QIM strategy, and the corresponding DCT coefficients are estimated directly from the spatial domain to reduce complexity. To enhance resilience, each bit is redundantly inserted across multiple keyframes selected based on scene transitions. Extensive simulations over 21 benchmark videos (CIF, 4CIF, HD) validate that the method achieves superior performance in robustness and perceptual quality, with an average Bit Error Rate (BER) of 1.03%, PSNR of 50.1 dB, SSIM of 0.996, and VMAF of 97.3 under compression, noise, cropping, and temporal desynchronization. The system outperforms several recent state-of-the-art techniques in both quality and speed, requiring no access to the original video during extraction. These results confirm the method’s viability for practical applications such as copyright protection and secure video streaming. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section E: Applied Mathematics)
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21 pages, 4252 KiB  
Article
AnimalAI: An Open-Source Web Platform for Automated Animal Activity Index Calculation Using Interactive Deep Learning Segmentation
by Mahtab Saeidifar, Guoming Li, Lakshmish Macheeri Ramaswamy, Chongxiao Chen and Ehsan Asali
Animals 2025, 15(15), 2269; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15152269 - 3 Aug 2025
Viewed by 235
Abstract
Monitoring the activity index of animals is crucial for assessing their welfare and behavior patterns. However, traditional methods for calculating the activity index, such as pixel intensity differencing of entire frames, are found to suffer from significant interference and noise, leading to inaccurate [...] Read more.
Monitoring the activity index of animals is crucial for assessing their welfare and behavior patterns. However, traditional methods for calculating the activity index, such as pixel intensity differencing of entire frames, are found to suffer from significant interference and noise, leading to inaccurate results. These classical approaches also do not support group or individual tracking in a user-friendly way, and no open-access platform exists for non-technical researchers. This study introduces an open-source web-based platform that allows researchers to calculate the activity index from top-view videos by selecting individual or group animals. It integrates Segment Anything Model2 (SAM2), a promptable deep learning segmentation model, to track animals without additional training or annotation. The platform accurately tracked Cobb 500 male broilers from weeks 1 to 7 with a 100% success rate, IoU of 92.21% ± 0.012, precision of 93.87% ± 0.019, recall of 98.15% ± 0.011, and F1 score of 95.94% ± 0.006, based on 1157 chickens. Statistical analysis showed that tracking 80% of birds in week 1, 60% in week 4, and 40% in week 7 was sufficient (r ≥ 0.90; p ≤ 0.048) to represent the group activity in respective ages. This platform offers a practical, accessible solution for activity tracking, supporting animal behavior analytics with minimal effort. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Animal Welfare)
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18 pages, 8744 KiB  
Article
A User-Centered Teleoperation GUI for Automated Vehicles: Identifying and Evaluating Information Requirements for Remote Driving and Assistance
by Maria-Magdalena Wolf, Henrik Schmidt, Michael Christl, Jana Fank and Frank Diermeyer
Multimodal Technol. Interact. 2025, 9(8), 78; https://doi.org/10.3390/mti9080078 - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 207
Abstract
Teleoperation emerged as a promising fallback for situations beyond the capabilities of automated vehicles. Nevertheless, teleoperation still faces challenges, such as reduced situational awareness. Since situational awareness is primarily built through the remote operator’s visual perception, the graphical user interface (GUI) design is [...] Read more.
Teleoperation emerged as a promising fallback for situations beyond the capabilities of automated vehicles. Nevertheless, teleoperation still faces challenges, such as reduced situational awareness. Since situational awareness is primarily built through the remote operator’s visual perception, the graphical user interface (GUI) design is critical. In addition to video feed, supplemental informational elements are crucial—not only for the predominantly studied remote driving, but also for emerging desk-based remote assistance concepts. This work develops a GUI for different teleoperation concepts by identifying key informational elements during the teleoperation process through expert interviews (N = 9). Following this, a static and dynamic GUI prototype was developed and evaluated in a click dummy study (N = 36). Thereby, the dynamic GUI adapts the number of displayed elements according to the teleoperation phase. Results show that both GUIs achieve good system usability scale (SUS) ratings, with the dynamic GUI significantly outperforming the static version in both usability and task completion time. However, the results might be attributable to a learning effect due to the lack of randomization. The user experience questionnaire (UEQ) score shows potential for improvement. To enhance the user experience, the GUI should be evaluated in a follow-up study that includes interaction with a real vehicle. Full article
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18 pages, 16316 KiB  
Article
AntGrip—Boosting Parallel Plate Gripper Performance Inspired by the Internal Hairs of Ant Mandibles
by Mohamed Sorour and Barbara Webb
Robotics 2025, 14(8), 105; https://doi.org/10.3390/robotics14080105 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 172
Abstract
Ants use their mandibles—effectively a two-finger gripper—for a wide range of grasping activities. Here, we investigate whether mimicking the internal hairs found on ant mandibles can improve performance of a two-finger parallel plate robot gripper. With bin-picking applications in mind, the gripper fingers [...] Read more.
Ants use their mandibles—effectively a two-finger gripper—for a wide range of grasping activities. Here, we investigate whether mimicking the internal hairs found on ant mandibles can improve performance of a two-finger parallel plate robot gripper. With bin-picking applications in mind, the gripper fingers are long and slim, with interchangeable soft gripping pads that can be hairy or hairless. A total of 2400 video-documented experiments have been conducted, comparing hairless to hairy pads with different hair patterns. Simply by adding hairs, the grasp success rate was increased by at least 29%, and the number of objects that remain securely gripped during manipulation more than doubled. This result not only advances the state of the art in grasping technology, but also provides novel insight into the mechanical role of mandible hairs in ant biology. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Intelligent Robots and Mechatronics)
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14 pages, 243 KiB  
Article
Building Safe Emergency Medical Teams with Emergency Crisis Resource Management (E-CRM): An Interprofessional Simulation-Based Study
by Juan Manuel Cánovas-Pallarés, Giulio Fenzi, Pablo Fernández-Molina, Lucía López-Ferrándiz, Salvador Espinosa-Ramírez and Vanessa Arizo-Luque
Healthcare 2025, 13(15), 1858; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13151858 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 301
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Effective teamwork is crucial for minimizing human error in healthcare settings. Medical teams, typically composed of physicians and nurses, supported by auxiliary professionals, achieve better outcomes when they possess strong collaborative competencies. High-quality teamwork is associated with fewer adverse events and [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Effective teamwork is crucial for minimizing human error in healthcare settings. Medical teams, typically composed of physicians and nurses, supported by auxiliary professionals, achieve better outcomes when they possess strong collaborative competencies. High-quality teamwork is associated with fewer adverse events and complications and lower mortality rates. Based on this background, the objective of this study is to analyze the perception of non-technical skills and immediate learning outcomes in interprofessional simulation settings based on E-CRM items. Methods: A cross-sectional observational study was conducted involving participants from the official postgraduate Medicine and Nursing programs at the Catholic University of Murcia (UCAM) during the 2024–2025 academic year. Four interprofessional E-CRM simulation sessions were planned, involving randomly assigned groups with proportional representation of medical and nursing students. Teams worked consistently throughout the training and participated in clinical scenarios observed via video transmission by their peers. Post-scenario debriefings followed INACSL guidelines and employed the PEARLS method. Results: Findings indicate that 48.3% of participants had no difficulty identifying the team leader, while 51.7% reported minor difficulty. Role assignment posed moderate-to-high difficulty for 24.1% of respondents. Communication, situation awareness, and early help-seeking were generally managed with ease, though mobilizing resources remained a challenge for 27.5% of participants. Conclusions: This study supports the value of interprofessional education in developing essential competencies for handling urgent, emergency, and high-complexity clinical situations. Strengthening interdisciplinary collaboration contributes to safer, more effective patient care. Full article
30 pages, 9797 KiB  
Article
Rate-Dependent Tensile Behavior of Glass Fiber Composites Reinforced with Quadriaxial Fabrics, with or Without Coremat Xi3 Interlayer, for Marine Applications
by Lorena Deleanu, George Pelin, Ioana Gabriela Chiracu, Iulian Păduraru, Mario Constandache, George Ghiocel Ojoc and Alexandru Viorel Vasiliu
Polymers 2025, 17(15), 2074; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17152074 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 324
Abstract
This study is among the first to characterize the tensile response of composites with quadriaxial glass fiber fabrics designed for marine structural applications. Four composite configurations were fabricated at laboratory scale, combining two matrix types (unsaturated polyester resin and epoxy resin) and the [...] Read more.
This study is among the first to characterize the tensile response of composites with quadriaxial glass fiber fabrics designed for marine structural applications. Four composite configurations were fabricated at laboratory scale, combining two matrix types (unsaturated polyester resin and epoxy resin) and the presence or absence of a Coremat Xi3 middle layer. Tensile tests were conducted at four test rates (10 mm/min, 200 mm/min, 500 mm/min, and 1000 mm/min), ranging from quasi-static to moderately dynamic conditions. Tests were conducted using the Instron 5982 universal testing machine (from Laboratory for Advanced Materials and Tribology, INCAS Bucharest, Romania). The specimens have a rectangular cross section, in agreement with SR EN ISO 527-4:2023. For strain measurements, an Instron advanced video extensometer (AVE) was used. Key mechanical parameters, such as maximum force, tensile strength, Young’s modulus, strain at break, and energy absorption, were extracted and analyzed. Results show that the polyester-based composite without a mat interlayer displayed the best overall performance, with the highest ultimate strength (~280 MPa), significant energy absorption (~106 J), and a consistent increase in ductility with increasing test rate. In contrast, the epoxy composite with Coremat Xi3 exhibited lower stiffness and strength, but higher strain and energy absorption at higher test rates, indicating a progressive failure behavior. These findings enhance the understanding of the tensile response of composites made of quadriaxial glass fiber fabric and provide valuable design data for structural components in marine environments, where both strength and energy absorption are essential. These insights support producers and end-users of non-crimp fabrics in making experimentally based selections of a composite, technological strategies, and design optimization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Epoxy Resins and Epoxy-Based Composites: Research and Development)
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15 pages, 4592 KiB  
Article
SSAM_YOLOv5: YOLOv5 Enhancement for Real-Time Detection of Small Road Signs
by Fatima Qanouni, Hakim El Massari, Noreddine Gherabi and Maria El-Badaoui
Digital 2025, 5(3), 30; https://doi.org/10.3390/digital5030030 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 382
Abstract
Many traffic-sign detection systems are available to assist drivers with particular conditions such as small and distant signs, multiple signs on the road, objects similar to signs, and other challenging conditions. Real-time object detection is an indispensable aspect of these detection systems, with [...] Read more.
Many traffic-sign detection systems are available to assist drivers with particular conditions such as small and distant signs, multiple signs on the road, objects similar to signs, and other challenging conditions. Real-time object detection is an indispensable aspect of these detection systems, with detection speed and efficiency being critical parameters. In terms of these parameters, to enhance performance in road-sign detection under diverse conditions, we proposed a comprehensive methodology, SSAM_YOLOv5, to handle feature extraction and small-road-sign detection performance. The method was based on a modified version of YOLOv5s. First, we introduced attention modules into the backbone to focus on the region of interest within video frames; secondly, we replaced the activation function with the SwishT_C activation function to enhance feature extraction and achieve a balance between inference, precision, and mean average precision (mAP@50) rates. Compared to the YOLOv5 baseline, the proposed improvements achieved remarkable increases of 1.4% and 1.9% in mAP@50 on the Tiny LISA and GTSDB datasets, respectively, confirming their effectiveness. Full article
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11 pages, 556 KiB  
Article
Added Value of SPECT/CT in Radio-Guided Occult Localization (ROLL) of Non-Palpable Pulmonary Nodules Treated with Uniportal Video-Assisted Thoracoscopy
by Demetrio Aricò, Lucia Motta, Giulia Giacoppo, Michelangelo Bambaci, Paolo Macrì, Stefania Maria, Francesco Barbagallo, Nicola Ricottone, Lorenza Marino, Gianmarco Motta, Giorgia Leone, Carlo Carnaghi, Vittorio Gebbia, Domenica Caponnetto and Laura Evangelista
J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14(15), 5337; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14155337 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 249
Abstract
Background/Objectives: The extensive use of computed tomography (CT) has led to a significant increase in the detection of small and non-palpable pulmonary nodules, necessitating the use of invasive methods for definitive diagnosis. Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) has become the preferred procedure for nodule [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: The extensive use of computed tomography (CT) has led to a significant increase in the detection of small and non-palpable pulmonary nodules, necessitating the use of invasive methods for definitive diagnosis. Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) has become the preferred procedure for nodule resections; however, intraoperative localization remains challenging, especially for deep or subsolid lesions. This study explores whether SPECT/CT improves the technical and clinical outcomes of radio-guided occult lesion localization (ROLL) before uniportal video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (u-VATS). Methods: This is a retrospective study involving consecutive patients referred for the resection of pulmonary nodules who underwent CT-guided ROLL followed by u-VATS between September 2017 and December 2024. From January 2023, SPECT/CT was systematically added after planar imaging. The cohort was divided into a planar group and a planar + SPECT/CT group. The inclusion criteria involved nodules sized ≤ 2 cm, with ground glass or solid characteristics, located at a depth of <6 cm from the pleural surface. 99mTc-MAA injected activity, timing, the classification of planar and SPECT/CT image findings (focal uptake, multisite with focal uptake, multisite without focal uptake), spillage, and post-procedure complications were evaluated. Statistical analysis was performed, with continuous data expressed as the median and categorical data as the number. Comparisons were made using chi-square tests for categorical variables and the Mann–Whitney U test for procedural duration. Cohen’s kappa coefficient was calculated to assess agreement between imaging modalities. Results: In total, 125 patients were selected for CT-guided radiotracer injection followed by uniportal-VATS. The planar group and planar + SPECT/CT group comprised 60 and 65 patients, respectively. Focal uptake was detected in 68 (54%), multisite with focal uptake in 46 (36.8%), and multisite without focal uptake in 11 patients (8.8%). In comparative analyses between planar and SPECT/CT imaging in 65 patients, 91% exhibited focal uptake, revealing significant differences in classification for 40% of the patients. SPECT/CT corrected the classification of 23 patients initially categorized as multisite with focal uptake to focal uptake, improving localization accuracy. The mean procedure duration was 39 min with SPECT/CT. Pneumothorax was more frequently detected with SPECT/CT (43% vs. 1.6%). The intraoperative localization success rate was 96%. Conclusions: SPECT/CT imaging in the ROLL procedure for detecting pulmonary nodules before u-VATs demonstrates a significant advantage in reclassifying radiotracer positioning compared to planar imaging. Considering its limited impact on surgical success rates and additional procedural time, SPECT/CT should be reserved for technically challenging cases. Larger sample sizes, multicentric and prospective randomized studies, and formal cost–utility analyses are warranted. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Nuclear Medicine & Radiology)
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20 pages, 642 KiB  
Article
Impact of Audio Delay and Quality in Network Music Performance
by Konstantinos Tsioutas, George Xylomenos and Ioannis Doumanis
Future Internet 2025, 17(8), 337; https://doi.org/10.3390/fi17080337 - 28 Jul 2025
Viewed by 209
Abstract
Network Music Performance (NMP) refers to network-based remote collaboration when applied to music performances, such as musical education, music production and live music concerts. In NMP, the most important parameter for the Quality of Experience (QoE) of the participants is low end-to-end audio [...] Read more.
Network Music Performance (NMP) refers to network-based remote collaboration when applied to music performances, such as musical education, music production and live music concerts. In NMP, the most important parameter for the Quality of Experience (QoE) of the participants is low end-to-end audio delay. Increasing delays prevent musicians’ synchronization and lead to a suboptimal musical experience. Visual contact between the participants is also crucial for their experience but highly demanding in terms of bandwidth. Since audio compression induces additional coding and decoding delays on the signal path, most NMP systems rely on audio quality reduction when bandwidth is limited to avoid violating the stringent delay limitations of NMP. To assess the delay and quality tolerance limits for NMP and see if they can be satisfied by emerging 5G networks, we asked eleven pairs of musicians to perform musical pieces of their choice in a carefully controlled laboratory environment, which allowed us to set different end-to-end delays or audio sampling rates. To assess the QoE of these NMP sessions, each musician responded to a set of questions after each performance. The analysis of the musicians’ responses revealed that actual musicians in delay-controlled NMP scenarios can synchronize at delays of up to 40 ms, compared to the 25–30 ms reported in rhythmic hand-clapping experiments. Our analysis also shows that audio quality can be considerably reduced by sub-sampling, so as to save bandwidth without significant QoE loss. Finally, we find that musicians rely more on audio and less on video to synchronize during an NMP session. These results indicate that NMP can become feasible in advanced 5G networks. Full article
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18 pages, 4836 KiB  
Article
Deep Learning to Analyze Spatter and Melt Pool Behavior During Additive Manufacturing
by Deepak Gadde, Alaa Elwany and Yang Du
Metals 2025, 15(8), 840; https://doi.org/10.3390/met15080840 - 28 Jul 2025
Viewed by 459
Abstract
To capture the complex metallic spatter and melt pool behavior during the rapid interaction between the laser and metal material, high-speed cameras are applied to record the laser powder bed fusion process and generate a large volume of image data. In this study, [...] Read more.
To capture the complex metallic spatter and melt pool behavior during the rapid interaction between the laser and metal material, high-speed cameras are applied to record the laser powder bed fusion process and generate a large volume of image data. In this study, four deep learning algorithms are applied: YOLOv5, Fast R-CNN, RetinaNet, and EfficientDet. They are trained by the recorded videos to learn and extract information on spatter and melt pool behavior during the laser powder bed fusion process. The well-trained models achieved high accuracy and low loss, demonstrating strong capability in accurately detecting and tracking spatter and melt pool dynamics. A stability index is proposed and calculated based on the melt pool length change rate. Greater index value reflects a more stable melt pool. We found that more spatters were detected for the unstable melt pool, while fewer spatters were found for the stable melt pool. The spatter’s size can affect its initial ejection speed, and large spatters are ejected slowly while small spatters are ejected rapidly. In addition, more than 58% of detected spatters have their initial ejection angle in the range of 60–120°. These findings provide a better understanding of spatter and melt pool dynamics and behavior, uncover the influence of melt pool stability on spatter formation, and demonstrate the correlation between the spatter size and its initial ejection speed. This work will contribute to the extraction of important information from high-speed recorded videos for additive manufacturing to reduce waste, lower cost, enhance part quality, and increase process reliability. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Machine Learning in Metal Additive Manufacturing)
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23 pages, 3864 KiB  
Article
Seeing Is Craving: Neural Dynamics of Appetitive Processing During Food-Cue Video Watching and Its Impact on Obesity
by Jinfeng Han, Kaixiang Zhuang, Debo Dong, Shaorui Wang, Feng Zhou, Yan Jiang and Hong Chen
Nutrients 2025, 17(15), 2449; https://doi.org/10.3390/nu17152449 - 27 Jul 2025
Viewed by 341
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Digital food-related videos significantly influence cravings, appetite, and weight outcomes; however, the dynamic neural mechanisms underlying appetite fluctuations during naturalistic viewing remain unclear. This study aimed to identify neural activity patterns associated with moment-to-moment appetite changes during naturalistic food-cue video viewing [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Digital food-related videos significantly influence cravings, appetite, and weight outcomes; however, the dynamic neural mechanisms underlying appetite fluctuations during naturalistic viewing remain unclear. This study aimed to identify neural activity patterns associated with moment-to-moment appetite changes during naturalistic food-cue video viewing and to examine their relationships with cravings and weight-related outcomes. Methods: Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data were collected from 58 healthy female participants as they viewed naturalistic food-cue videos. Participants concurrently provided continuous ratings of their appetite levels throughout video viewing. Hidden Markov Modeling (HMM), combined with machine learning regression techniques, was employed to identify distinct neural states reflecting dynamic appetite fluctuations. Findings were independently validated using a shorter-duration food-cue video viewing task. Results: Distinct neural states characterized by heightened activation in default mode and frontoparietal networks consistently corresponded with increases in appetite ratings. Importantly, the higher expression of these appetite-related neural states correlated positively with participants’ Body Mass Index (BMI) and post-viewing food cravings. Furthermore, these neural states mediated the relationship between BMI and food craving levels. Longitudinal analyses revealed that the expression levels of appetite-related neural states predicted participants’ BMI trajectories over a subsequent six-month period. Participants experiencing BMI increases exhibited a significantly greater expression of these neural states compared to those whose BMI remained stable. Conclusions: Our findings elucidate how digital food cues dynamically modulate neural processes associated with appetite. These neural markers may serve as early indicators of obesity risk, offering valuable insights into the psychological and neurobiological mechanisms linking everyday media exposure to food cravings and weight management. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Nutrition and Obesity)
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25 pages, 5652 KiB  
Article
Modeling and Optimization of the Vacuum Degassing Process in Electric Steelmaking Route
by Bikram Konar, Noah Quintana and Mukesh Sharma
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2368; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082368 - 25 Jul 2025
Viewed by 270
Abstract
Vacuum degassing (VD) is a critical refining step in electric arc furnace (EAF) steelmaking for producing clean steel with reduced nitrogen and hydrogen content. This study develops an Effective Equilibrium Reaction Zone (EERZ) model focused on denitrogenation (de-N) by simulating interfacial reactions at [...] Read more.
Vacuum degassing (VD) is a critical refining step in electric arc furnace (EAF) steelmaking for producing clean steel with reduced nitrogen and hydrogen content. This study develops an Effective Equilibrium Reaction Zone (EERZ) model focused on denitrogenation (de-N) by simulating interfacial reactions at the bubble–steel interface (Z1). The model incorporates key process parameters such as argon flow rate, vacuum pressure, and initial nitrogen and sulfur concentrations. A robust empirical correlation was established between de-N efficiency and the mass of Z1, reducing prediction time from a day to under a minute. Additionally, the model was further improved by incorporating a dynamic surface exposure zone (Z_eye) to account for transient ladle eye effects on nitrogen removal under deep vacuum (<10 torr), validated using synchronized plant trials and Python-based video analysis. The integrated approach—combining thermodynamic-kinetic modeling, plant validation, and image-based diagnostics—provides a robust framework for optimizing VD control and enhancing nitrogen removal control in EAF-based steelmaking. Full article
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